JoelF wrote:my typical recipe is 2 parts good soy, 1 part rice wine vinegar, 1 part sesame oil, a little sugar to taste, grate some ginger, maybe some garlic if your dumplings are bland, and sliver some chives or scallions. Fresh garlic and scallions will beat anything bottled.
Hands down.
If nothing else, put some scallions and ginger in anything bottled you get.
Amata wrote:Richwell Market sells Weichuan brand "Dumpling Sauce -- Hot". The ingredients on the back are soy sauce, sugar, rice vinegar, garlic juice, sesame oil, and chili oil.
JoelF wrote:Ah - another good point. If I have chili oil, I use that with or instead of the sesame oil.
polster wrote:Amata wrote:Richwell Market sells Weichuan brand "Dumpling Sauce -- Hot". The ingredients on the back are soy sauce, sugar, rice vinegar, garlic juice, sesame oil, and chili oil.
Thanks Amata for the suggestion. I bought the Wei-Chuan Dumpling Sauce @ Mitsuwa Marketplace in Arlington Hts for $1.59 for the bottle. They have both hot and mild varieties of the sauce.
eatchicago wrote:I usually have a bottle of this stuff on hand for use in dumpling sauces with a bit of a kick.
G Wiv wrote:eatchicago wrote:I usually have a bottle of this stuff on hand for use in dumpling sauces with a bit of a kick.
I usually have a bottle of this around for the same purpose.![]()
polster wrote:Amata wrote:Richwell Market sells Weichuan brand "Dumpling Sauce -- Hot". The ingredients on the back are soy sauce, sugar, rice vinegar, garlic juice, sesame oil, and chili oil.
Thanks Amata for the suggestion. I bought the Wei-Chuan Dumpling Sauce @ Mitsuwa Marketplace in Arlington Hts for $1.59 for the bottle. They have both hot and mild varieties of the sauce.
bweiny wrote:Reviving this thread 11 years late, but better than letting the correct answer go unsaid.
Cathy2 wrote:Thank you!
I love, love, love when old threads get updated with new information.
You made my day!